Over at the Atlantic, Alexis Hauk examines the final resting places of America's greatest writers.

Writers' graves can be surprising places to visit. Unlike the luminaries
housed at more elegant cemeteries, like Pere Lachaise in Paris (Victor
Hugo, Marcel Proust, Oscar Wilde, Gertrude Stein, Richard Wright), many
literary stars lie for eternity in simpler, plainer spots around this
country, with traditions around how to commemorate them as widely varied
as the genres they comprise.